Scott, Murray Introduce WAGE Act to Strengthen Protections for Workers
Legislation would help ensure workers can advocate for higher wages and improve workplace conditions without unlawful interference from employers
WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-VA) and U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) introduced the Workplace Action for a Growing Economy (WAGE) Act, legislation to strengthen protections for workers who want to raise wages and improve workplace conditions. The WAGE Act would amend the National Labor Relations Act to help ensure workers are able to have a voice in the workplace and would crack down on employers who break the law when workers exercise their basic right to collective action. In a press conference announcing the legislation, Scott and Murray were joined by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and Ross Eisenbrey, Vice President of the Economic Policy Institute.
“This legislation is critical to workers, their families and our nation’s economy,” said Congressman Scott. “For too long, employers have used illegal tactics to fight back against union organizing drives – tactics like threatening workers and firing them for union activity. They have gotten away with it because the National Labor Relations Act – the law protecting workers’ right to organize – leaves workers with little or no recourse. The WAGE Act changes that.”
“Too often, as workers are underpaid, overworked, and treated unfairly on the job, some companies are doing everything they can to prevent them from having a voice in the workplace,” said Senator Murray. “The WAGE Act would strengthen protections for all workers and it would finally crack down on employers who break the law when workers exercise their basic right to collective action. I am going to be fighting for this legislation to help make sure our country, our government, and our workplaces work for all families, not just the biggest corporations or the wealthiest few.”
“The WAGE Act is a critical first step in addressing both a changing economy and labor laws that have failed to keep up with a changing workplace,” said Richard Trumka, President of the AFL-CIO. “The economy is a set of rules that for too long have been rigged against working people. The WAGE Act is about changing these rules – for all working people, whether they’re in a union or not. It’s a bold first step and a key thread to the larger fabric of the raising wages agenda.”
“Today, you pay a bigger fine for fishing out of season than you do for illegally firing employees, an act that can put terrible stress on them and their families, ruin their health, and wreck their financial security,” said Ross Eisenbrey, Vice President of the Economic Policy Institute. “If wages and working conditions are going to improve, it has to be safe for employees to make demands.”
FACT SHEET: The Workplace Action for a Growing Economy (WAGE) Act
Real, long-term economic growth comes from the middle out, not the top down, and our government, economy, and workplaces should work for all families, not just the wealthiest few. Collective bargaining rights and unions have been key drivers in economic security, and for decades, unions have helped millions of families climb into the middle class. But over the past few decades, workers’ wages have stagnated, and many families struggle to make ends meet. At the same time, too many employers take advantage of weak worker protections to prevent them from advocating for improvements in their workplace. The penalties that are supposed to protect workers do little to deter employers from breaking the law.
The Workplace Action for a Growing Economy (WAGE) Act would amend the National Labor Relations Act to strengthen protections for workers who want to organize and promote change through forming a union or other collective action. The WAGE Act would provide stronger protections for all workers, whether they are part of a union or not, who want to talk with their coworkers about equal pay, advocate for safety improvements, or increase wages. The WAGE Act removes perverse incentives for employers to break the law by increasing remedies for workers and would impose new penalties on employers who act illegally. When workers can exercise basic worker rights without interference from their employers, it will expand economic security and help ensure the economy grows from the middle out, not the top down.
The WAGE Act would strengthen protections for workers and better protect workers’ fundamental right to join together with their co-workers and advocate for change by:
· Tripling the backpay that employers must pay to workers who are fired or retaliated against by their employers, regardless of immigration status.
· Providing workers with a private right of action to bring suit to recover monetary damages and attorneys’ fees in federal district court, just as they can under civil rights laws.
· Providing for federal court injunctions to immediately return fired workers to their jobs.
· Ensuring employers will be jointly responsible for violations affecting workers supplied by another employer.
The WAGE Act would put an end to the perverse incentives for employers to interfere with workers’ rights by:
· Establishing civil penalties up to $50,000 for employers who commit unfair labor practices and doubled penalties for repeat violations. This would bring the NLRA in line with other workplace laws.
· Giving the National Labor Relations Board authority to impose penalties on officers and directors of employer violators.
· Allowing the Board to issue a bargaining order upon finding that an employer prevented a free and fair election, provided that a majority of employees signed authorization cards within the previous 12 months.
· Setting a 30-day time limit for employers to challenge an NLRB decision, after which the NLRB decision becomes final and binding unless a court directs otherwise. The NLRB could then go directly to district court to enforce its orders.
This legislation would ensure workers know their rights in the workplace by:
· Requiring employers to inform workers of their rights under the NLRA by posting a notice developed by the NLRB and informing workers of their rights at the time of hiring.
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